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Getting an EV charger properly installed at home or at your business makes a real difference to how convenient electric driving is. If you're ready to find someone local, MyBuilder is the simple way to do it. Post your job for free and hear from EV charger installers near you who are interested and available. Compare profiles, read real reviews from customers, and get quotes before deciding who to hire.

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Our EV Charger Installers, are rated 4.9 out of 5 based on 2613 reviews from customers like you.

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Why is professional EV charger installation worth it?

Many electric vehicle owners start out charging from a three-pin socket. It works, but it's slow, a full charge overnight isn't always guaranteed, and it puts sustained load on a socket that was never designed for it.

  • A dedicated home charger is faster, safer, and once you're on a smart tariff, it can be cheaper to run.

  • EV charger installation can be handled by electricians. The work needs to meet UK wiring regulations, and to claim any government grant funding, your installer must be OZEV-approved.

  • A professional EV installer will assess your property, recommend the right charger for your car and situation, submit the grant claim on your behalf after installation (if you qualify and have already been approved by OZEV), and leave you with everything set up and working before they go.

MyBuilder makes finding an installer easy. Post your job with a few details about your property and what you're looking for, and local EV charger installers who are available and interested will get in touch.

You can check their profiles, read genuine customer reviews, and compare quotes, all in one place, without having to call around.

What services do EV charger installers offer?

EV charger installation covers a broader range of work than most people expect. Whether you're a homeowner wanting a simple wall-mounted unit, or a business looking to fit out a car park, there's a significant difference in what the job involves.

  • Home EV charger installation: The most common request is a single 7kW chargepoint fitted to an exterior wall or inside a garage. Most home installations are completed in a few hours, and an installer should commission the smart charging software before they leave so everything is ready to use straight away.

  • Workplace and commercial EV charger installation: For businesses installing chargers for staff, customers, or a fleet, the scope is wider. EV charger installers can fit anything from a single unit to a bank of fast chargers across a car park. Larger commercial setups may require electrical infrastructure work, consumer unit upgrades, new cable runs, or in some cases a DNO connection upgrade, before installation can proceed.

  • Rapid charger installation: For businesses where vehicles need a meaningful charge in 20-30 minutes like retail car parks, service depots, hospitality venues. Rapid chargers are a specialist installation requiring substantial electrical supply and are significantly more involved than a standard fast charger.

  • Consumer unit and electrical supply upgrades: Before any charger can be installed, the existing electrical supply needs enough capacity to support it. Where it doesn't, the installer will carry out or arrange the necessary upgrades first.

  • Smart charger setup and commissioning: Once the hardware is in place, the charger needs to be connected to your Wi-Fi, paired with the manufacturer's app, and configured for scheduled charging. This should be included in any reputable installer's quote.

  • Grant application support: For the domestic EV chargepoint grant, you apply through the OZEV portal yourself first; once approved, your OZEV-registered installer submits the claim after the work is done. For the Workplace Charging Scheme, businesses apply directly. In all cases, an OZEV-approved installer is required to carry out the work and process the claim.

If you're looking for any of these services, post your job on MyBuilder and local EV charger installers near you will get in touch.

What happens on installation day?

If you've never had an EV charger fitted before, it helps to know what to expect. The job is more involved than attaching a box to the wall, and a thorough installer will work through a clear sequence to make sure everything is safe, compliant, and working properly before they leave.

EV charger installation process:

  • Site assessment: Even if the installer has already visited or seen photos during the quoting stage, they'll start by confirming the planned cable route and making sure the install location is suitable.

  • Cable installation: The installer runs a dedicated cable from your consumer unit to the charger location. This might involve running cable through walls, across a ceiling, or under a floor.

  • Charger mounting and wiring: The chargepoint unit is fixed to the wall and wired into the dedicated circuit. Most modern units are compact and purpose-built for outdoor installation, so they're weatherproof as standard.

  • Consumer unit connection: A new breaker is added to your consumer unit for the charger circuit. This is the point at which the electrical work is most involved, and why the job needs a qualified electrician rather than a handyman.

  • Testing and inspection: Before the charger is switched on, the installer will test the circuit to confirm everything is wired correctly and safe. This is a required step under UK wiring regulations and should be documented.

  • Commissioning: Connecting the charger to your home Wi-Fi, setting up the manufacturer app, and configuring smart charging so you can schedule overnight charges to run on cheaper off-peak electricity.

  • Certification: On completion, your installer should provide an Electrical Installation Certificate confirming the work complies with BS 7671 wiring regulations.

The whole process typically takes between two and four hours for a straightforward home installation. If a consumer unit upgrade is needed, or the cable run is particularly long or complex, it can take a full day.

How much does EV charger installation cost?

For most homeowners, a standard 7kW home charger is fully installed for between £800 and £1,200. That figure covers the hardware, labour, and commissioning, but it assumes a reasonably straightforward install with no additional electrical work needed.

Costs go up if your consumer unit needs upgrading, the cable run is long, or you're installing multiple units for a commercial property.

Rapid charger installations are a different category entirely, with costs starting at around £15,000 per unit once hardware and infrastructure are factored in.

EV Charger Installation TypeTypical Cost
Standard 7kW home charger (supply and fit)£800-£1,200
Workplace fast charger 7–22kW (supply and fit)£2,000-£4,500
Rapid charger 50kW DC (supply and fit)£15,000-£30,000
Consumer unit upgrade (where needed)£400-£800 (sometimes more for complex jobs)

For a full breakdown of what drives costs up or down, our EV charger installation cost guide covers it in detail. For larger projects, the commercial EV charger installation cost guide can give you useful information.

Grants available for EV charger installation

A grant is one thing worth sorting before you get quotes rather than after. Checking which grants you're eligible for can affect which charger model makes sense and which EV charger installer you go with. The main schemes currently available are:

  • EV chargepoint grant (domestic): Covers 75% of the purchase and installation cost, up to a maximum of £500 as of April 2026. Available to renters and flat owners with dedicated off-street parking who own an eligible EV (freehold homeowners with a driveway aren't eligible). A separate grant of up to £500 is available for households with only on-street parking who install a cross-pavement solution. You apply through the OZEV portal yourself and wait for approval before any work begins; your OZEV-approved installer then claims the grant after installation.

  • Workplace Charging Scheme (WCS): For UK businesses, charities, and public sector organisations. Covers 75% of the purchase and installation cost, up to £500 per socket (increased from £350 in April 2026), for up to 40 sockets across all sites. State-funded schools and education institutions can claim up to £2,000 per socket under a separate version of the same scheme.

  • Residential Landlord Chargepoint Grant: For private landlords, social housing providers, and property management companies. Covers up to £500 per socket for up to 200 sockets across all properties.

All schemes require an OZEV-approved installer and an eligible chargepoint unit (a smart charger on the OZEV-approved products list).

Your installer can confirm whether your proposed hardware qualifies, but you'll need to apply for the grant yourself through the OZEV portal before any work begins. The installer submits the claim after installation is complete.

Already applied before 1 April 2026? If your application was approved under the old £350 rate but your chargepoint hasn't been installed yet, you can re-apply for the new £500 rate. Your existing application will be cancelled when the new one is submitted.

Note: Grant rates and eligibility criteria do change. Always confirm current terms at gov.uk or with your installer before committing as grants cannot be claimed retrospectively. All current schemes run until 31 March 2027.

Qualifications to look for in an EV charger installer

The EV charger installation market has grown quickly, and not every installer operating in it has the same level of training. Knowing what to look for helps you find the right professional for the job.

  • OZEV approval: The Office for Zero Emission Vehicles approves installers who meet the required standard for EV chargepoint installation. OZEV approval is mandatory for grant-eligible work and is the qualification to look for if you qualify for the grants.

  • NICEIC registration: The National Inspection Council for Electrical Installation Contracting is one of the UK's main electrical competency schemes. NICEIC-registered contractors are assessed regularly against BS 7671 wiring regulations, and their work is backed by an insurance-backed guarantee.

  • NAPIT membership: The National Association of Professional Inspectors and Testers is another recognised competency scheme for electrical installers. Like NICEIC, NAPIT membership involves regular assessment and covers the installer's work under a guarantee scheme.

  • SELECT membership: SELECT is the equivalent recognised competency scheme for electricians in Scotland. If you're based north of the border, a SELECT-registered electrician meets the same standard as NICEIC or NAPIT for the rest of the UK.

  • Part P certification: Domestic electrical work in England and Wales must comply with Part P of the Building Regulations. Installers registered with a competency scheme like NICEIC, NAPIT, or SELECT can self-certify their work, which means you don't need to apply for building regulations approval separately.

  • Manufacturer accreditation: Some charger brands run their own installer accreditation programmes. An EV charger installer accredited by the manufacturer of the unit they're fitting has been trained specifically on that hardware, which can be relevant if you have a specific charger in mind.

On MyBuilder, you can check an installer's profile before getting in touch, reviewing their customer reviews and portfolios. This makes it straightforward to shortlist people with the right credentials for your job.

For more information on hiring electricians near you, visit the MyBuilder electricians directory page.

Find EV charger installers near you with MyBuilder

There's no need to spend hours searching for the right installer. With MyBuilder, EV charger installers come to you. Just follow these simple steps:

Step 1: Post your EV charger installation job

Describe what you need, including your property type, where you're thinking of having the charger fitted, your car’s make if you know it, and anything you already know about your electrical setup. Photos of your consumer unit and the intended install location are genuinely useful and help installers give you a more accurate quote upfront.

Step 2: Compare local EV charger installers

Once your job is live, you’ll receive responses from local EV charger installers who are available and eager to take on the job. You can browse their MyBuilder profiles, check customer reviews, and look at photos of their previous work.

This is also the right time to ask what's included in their quote, about their OZEV approval if you qualify for the grant, and how they handle the grant application process if its relevant for you.

Step 3: Hire with confidence

With quotes and profiles in hand, you can make an informed decision and hire the installer that's right for your job. Once the work is complete, leaving a review on MyBuilder helps other homeowners find the right people for their projects.

All tradespeople on MyBuilder undergo checks at registration, such as ID documents, company details, certifications for regulated jobs, and skill assessments, allowing you to hire with confidence.

Questions to ask EV charger installers before hiring

Before you hire, it's worth taking a few minutes to ask these questions. The answers will quickly tell you whether an installer is the right fit and whether that attractive quote covers everything it should.

Will you carry out a site survey before quoting?

A quote given without a site survey is essentially a guess. The survey is when the installer checks your consumer unit capacity, measures the cable run, and identifies anything that might complicate the job. If a quote arrives without one, ask how they've accounted for those variables.

What EV charger brands do you work with?

Installers who've been doing this for a while tend to have clear views on which brands hold up over time. Ask them to explain the differences between the options they're quoting rather than just handing over a spec sheet. Someone who can't answer that question confidently is worth scrutinising.

Will you set up the app and configure smart charging on the day?

Once the EV charger is on the wall, it still needs connecting to your home Wi-Fi and pairing with the manufacturer's app before the smart features actually work. This should be part of the job as standard, but some installers price it separately or leave it to you. Worth confirming upfront what's included.

Will I receive an Electrical Installation Certificate on completion?

This is a legal requirement for notifiable electrical work and confirms the installation meets BS 7671 wiring regulations. You'll need it if you ever sell your home or make an insurance claim. If an installer seems unfamiliar with this, that's a concern.

Do you offer a warranty on parts and labour?

Ask what's covered, for how long, and what the process is if something goes wrong after installation. A year on labour is reasonable as standard; manufacturers typically offer longer warranties on the hardware itself.

Are you OZEV-approved?

If you're planning to claim a grant, OZEV approval is required. Ask to confirm it upfront, and check that the charger model they're proposing is also on the OZEV-approved products list. If you're not claiming a grant, OZEV approval isn't necessary, but you should still confirm the installer is registered with a competent person scheme (NICEIC, NAPIT, or SELECT).

Do you have public liability insurance?

Always ask to see proof before work starts. EV charger installation involves live electrical connections and work to the fabric of your property. If something is accidentally damaged during the job, you want to know you're covered. A professional EV charger installer should be able to provide evidence without hesitation.

Why hiring an EV charger installer is easy with MyBuilder

Getting the right installer quickly is the most important step and with more EVs on the road than ever, demand for installation is only going in one direction. With MyBuilder you can:

  • Post your job for free and receive responses from installers who are interested and available
  • Browse profiles, read genuine customer reviews, and see photos of previous installations
  • Confirm certifications, and insurance before you commit, as well as OZEV approval if you want to make use of the the grant and qualify for it.
  • Compare quotes and make an informed decision before hiring

FAQs: Common questions on EV charger installation

Do I need planning permission for an EV charger?

Not usually. For most homes, fitting a charger is permitted development. The exceptions are listed buildings, conservation areas, and certain commercial installations near a public highway. If any of those apply, check with your local planning authority before instructing an installer.

How long does EV charger installation take?

A typical home install takes between two and four hours. If a consumer unit upgrade is needed, or the cable run is longer than usual, it can stretch to a full day. Commercial multi-bay projects are usually spread across several days.

Can I get an EV charger installed in my flat?

It depends. If you have a dedicated parking space and your own electrical supply, it's often straightforward. You'll need written permission from your landlord, freeholder, or management company before applying for the OZEV grant, not just before installation.

In a shared building you'll usually need the freeholder or management company's sign-off first, and a communal charging solution might make more practical sense. Post your job on MyBuilder today and local installers can advise on your specific setup.

Does it have to be an OZEV-approved installer?

Only if you want to claim a grant. For the installation work itself, what matters is that your electrician is registered with a competent person scheme such as NICEIC, NAPIT, or SELECT. They can carry out, certify, and notify the work legally without OZEV approval. OZEV approval is specifically a requirement for claiming the government grants.

How does overnight smart charging actually work?

Once your charger is connected to your home Wi-Fi, you set a schedule through the app, typically telling it to run between midnight and 7am when off-peak rates apply.

Most modern units do this automatically once you've set your preferred window. Your installer will walk you through setup on the day.

What's the difference between a home charger and a rapid charger?

A home charger (typically 7kW) is designed for overnight charging, it adds range steadily over several hours, which suits most daily driving patterns. A rapid charger (50kW+) delivers a meaningful charge in 20-30 minutes and is designed for public or commercial use where drivers can't wait long. Rapid chargers cost significantly more to install and require a much larger electrical supply.

Can I use any EV charger with my car?

Most home chargers use a Type 2 connector, which is compatible with the majority of electric cars sold in the UK. It's worth confirming compatibility with your specific vehicle before your installer orders hardware, and they'll be able to advise. For rapid chargers, connector types vary more, so this is worth discussing in detail at the quoting stage.

Tethered vs. untethered charger - which should you choose?

A tethered charger has the cable permanently attached, so you just plug in and charge without hunting for a cable each time. Most households prefer this for convenience.

An untethered charger has a socket instead, meaning you supply your own cable. It looks neater on the wall and gives you flexibility if you switch to a different vehicle with a different connector type. Either works well at home; it mostly comes down to personal preference and whether you're likely to change cars in the next few years.

Can I link my EV charger to solar panels?

Yes, and it's increasingly popular. Some chargers, including the Zappi and Hypervolt, have built-in solar diversion, which means they detect when your panels are generating surplus electricity and automatically route it into your car rather than exporting it back to the grid.

This can significantly reduce your charging costs if you already have solar installed, or if you're considering both at the same time. Not all chargers support this, so it's worth specifying solar compatibility when getting quotes.

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